140 " * ' /" "h \ In Boston, Keyed-up executives unwind at the Sheraton- Boston When you wind up in Boston, unwind at the glamorous, new Sheraton-Boston Hotel. It's ideally situated - nght off the Massachusetts Turnpike in the heart of the new Boston's shops, theatres, nightlife. There is a separate motor entrance and Free Parking. Over 1000 spacious, air-conditioned rooms, including tower suites high above the city. Your choice of superb restaurants and lounges - Falstaff Room, Persian Lounge, Cafe Riviera. The temperature-controlled swimming pool is bordered by a gardened terrace, and lanai rooms. Sheraton-Boston in Prudential Center: perfect hotel for keyed-up executives to unwind. For Insured Reservations at Guaranteed Rates, call the nearest Sheraton Hotel or Motor Inn. SIdered the ChristIan Radicals a maJOl threat to theology: In proclaiming the death of God, or at least of all language about Him, the new theology makes the most fundamental possible break with the long tradition of Christian theological discourse. . . . By asserting the death of God and the need " to construct a theology without Him, it issues a fundamental challenge to the es- '" sential structure of Biblical and Christian .J thought not only, of course, about God, but also about Jesus, nature. history and mankind-and for this reason, if for no other, it must be comprehended and an- swered. . . . At least it is ironically true that Chicago is now regarded as jointly defending with Union and Yale the "es- ,f tablishment" in theology; and the reason '\ is that membership in this conservative establishment is determined by the mere continuing use of God-language rather than by a static devotion to traditional or orthodox modes of theology. Gilkey now swung into his familiar pigeonholing style. From Barth this movement has ac- cepted the radical separation of the divine and the secular, of God and ordinary ex- perience, and so of theological language and philosophy; and it approves his fur- ther separation of Christianity and re- ligion, and the consequent centering of all theological and religious concerns, not on any innate "religiousness." "religious d priori," or religious ' depths," but solely on Jesus Christ. From Tillich it has accepted the campaign against theism, and against personalistic and mythological language about God. From Bultmann it has ab- sorbed the polemic against ancient "myth- ical" categories in theology, which polemic { needed only to be enlarged to include { bihlical-kerygmatic as '\;vell as objective- { interventionist theological language about { God to become very radical indeed. . .. Apparently this generation finds itself Ln- { fluenced solely by these particular nega- { tive elements of the older theology and not at all by the balancing positive ele- ments in each case: the emphasis on God, revelation, and the Word in Barth, on an ontological analysis of existential "depth," on revelation, and so on Being Itself in Tillich; and on existential inwardness and self-understanding "at the boundary" and "before God" in Bultmann. If these neg- ative elements in neo-orthodoxy alone are stressed, there is solely in that inheritance itself substantial ground for a radical revol u tion. f!Jod f!ßoy-red fROM ENGLAND-AUTHENTIC POST BOY VEST OF DOESKIN FLANNEL SPORT MOTIF JEWELER CRAFTED BRASS BUTTONS REO DEEP GOLD, HUNTER GREEN, BRITISH iAN. ALSO IN CAMBRIDGE GREY WITH lAPELS STATE SUIT SIZE. $21.50 : t.EASf:; ADD 65(;. PER PACKAGE. FOR POSTAGE. $' 'Æ . .....;. /\ 't/ : 'I. \, ". .\ { { { '","hen I heard that van Buren, { along with his intellectual shipmate Willial11 Hamilton, who is a professor of theologv at Colgate Rochester Di- { vinity School, was coming to New York t to attend a conference at Union Theo- logical SemInary, I decIded to look both men up. In the hope that Hamil- { ton might give me a gentle introduc- tion to van Buren's ideas, I talked with him first. I knew something about Hamilton's own thought from a thinly disguised autobiographical article he had written for T hrolo gy Today, entitled "Thursday's Child: The Theologian \, . , . .; '. ' \.. '* .. \ f: ,,J :. Æ.: . . :::. '. .-\ , ../ ",At ",I 'aut 8tnari. 1$ EAST 4S'T-H $1'R$$T, !'l:EW'" 'YORl( '.' J. ,,;;'tî't "7f,./ * Àl tt OF NEW ENGLAND m f!JooIntaleJt4 ce 1334 { { { { /0) _:--; ,N'''''' '}.-'- ' / , ' 0 ,/, : '" v _.' H .:;:- ::,.,':. :,..< ...,t ø ,:. ; ': -: . ...;.... ... ........... ,H- p. }f t1!J utTh OeCe Our famous plain toe model in imported grain. Genuine plan- tation crepe sole with rein- forced leather tip. Available at finest shops or please write. { { { { { * * 0:. .Alb,ett l1oe <to f!J iwn Ó4 J uÍtaM. j }